Feedback on Feedback to Feedback

Picture 4
All,
Thanks again for your kind words and emails. Sorry for the delay in getting this to you. As promised, I managed to spend time with Brian Burke this week and he tackled a lot of the follow-up questions that came through from the “Accountability” post written last week.

The following follow-up questions and answers are shown in no particular order. The questions, and the prior comments by Brian they refer to, are indented and shaded below. The new answers follow each shaded box.

I realize there were more questions asked but I wanted to get at least some addressed sooner rather than later. Thanks to Brian for taking the time to sit down with me again to discuss questions raised here on Ink.

Cheers,
RBH

Please re-round the circle squared by eBay President Lorrie Norrington on the eBay Announcement Board on March 20, 2008 titled “Update For Sellers”.

Norrington seems to be attempting to address the concerns of sellers who fear a neg from a non paying bidder. She attempts to mitigate the new “neg sellers only” policy by writing:

“What we have determined is that if the buyer does not specifically call out poor seller performance, item condition or transaction problems during the UPI process, eBay will remove the seller’s negative or neutral feedback — retroactively.”

This makes no sense. Sellers do not send items won in auctions before receiving payment. How can a buyer who leaves a neg be justified by claiming a problem with “item condition” for an item never sent, received nor seen? Again, sellers DO NOT send items without first receiving payment.

While Norrington’s “solution” may be boss pleasing “disruptive innovation”, it flat out makes no sense in the real world of selling on eBay.

This policy is designed to address a specific issue raised at the eCommerce Forum in January. Specifically, sellers complained that the current protections for sellers with the UPI process - the buyer must fail to respond completely - was inadequate, since all a buyer had to do was enter a single character or comment that they had no intention of paying, and any negative or neutral FB left by the buyer would remain.

Sellers shouldn’t send items prior to receiving payment. But if a buyer is complaining about the product condition in the UPI process, it’s a good indication that the buyer did pay.

Buyers who respond and respond in a manner that clearly indicates the seller was not at fault, such as “I found another one” or “my spouse is in the hospital so I can’t pay” shouldn’t be negatively impacted by a buyer’s negative Feedback.

However, if the buyer states, “I refuse to pay via Western Union” or “I just sent payment” or “I paid” (NOTE, some sellers file false claims, those caught are suspended) or “I did a charge back because you refused to send me a refund for the damaged product” would result in negative or neutral Feedback remaining.

A buyer who is referencing product condition, not receiving the product, etc. is a very good indicator that the buyer sent money.

We will continue to evaluate this policy.


We used a really simple definition when determining exactly what constituted retaliatory negative feedback. It was strictly a user who received a negative feedback and subsequently left a negative feedback.

Severely flawed research error. The definition of retaliatory feedback” is based on an assumption not a fact.

With millions and millions of transactions happening we have to study behavior over time in order to identify trends and to determine whether or not a specific trend needs addressing. The fact is that 4 years ago, sellers would leave a negative after a buyer had left a negative twice as frequently than a buyer would and today it is eight times as frequently. That is a significant change in behavior and one that needed to be addressed. Again, we examined a lot of alternatives before coming to the conclusion that the feedback system needed to change. We learned that when a buyer gets a negative feedback in the eBay marketplace, they discontinue participating in the marketplace and it’s not healthy for anyone.

In January we mentioned that we’d block buyers from leaving negative or neutral Feedback for 3 days for sellers “with a track record.” Since January, we’ve made the decision to increase the wait period to 7 days and define “track record” as active PowerSellers who have been on eBay for at least 12 months.

What about NON-Powersellers? Does this mean the buyer could leave us a negative IMMEDIATELY? Or does it mean they can do it within 3 days, and only PS get the 7 day protection? This needs immediate clarification. Richard, PLEASE get a clarification on this.
————–
Why does the cooling off period, given it is so short a timeframe, only apply to PS? Why not to those who have been on the site for years? Why not to everyone?

Right now only PowerSellers get the 7-day protection. This has replaced the 3-day block rule introduced back in January. Suspension types and frequencies of suspensions were analyzed and it was determined that PowerSellers were the safest population of users to single out for this protection. If safety issues arise we could restrict this beyond the 12-month, PowerSeller distinction and, conversely, if we see positive results and gain confidence in the 7-day protection model, we could expand to other sellers. I don’t see this happening in the next 6 months though.

Richard, while you’re at it, can you please get an explanation as to how a waiting period adversely affects buyers anyway? Sellers have to give buyers 7 days to pay before they can file a UID. Why not give ALL sellers the same 7 day “benefit of the doubt?”

Essentially, we’re trying to balance marketplace safety with seller satisfaction. We want buyers to know immediately about a potentially bad or fraudulent buyer experience to better avoid repeat occurrences.


The way we’re going to hold buyers accountable is through private reporting from sellers; through enhancing the tools that we’ve given sellers to help protect them from buyers.

What enhancements? Here’s the thing — the only thing that I’ve ever found helpful on feedback left for buyers is utilizing their feedback received when someone is slow in paying (ie, I’m not sure if they will follow through). If they have negs for non-payment, I’ll file a UPI a bit faster. If they don’t, I give them a lot more time/leeway. Will sellers have access to info on whether UPI reports have been made against buyers?
—————-
What enhancements to which tools?

Sellers will not have direct access to info on whether UPI reports have been made against buyers. However, there is a buyer requirement tool that will allow sellers to block buyers with a UPI track record of 2 or more items. We’ve also introduced a seller reporting hub.

We’re going to take a look at what buyers are saying in the UPI console and remove it if it is arbitrary.
Who is going to be doing this? What will be the guidelines as to what is “arbitrary?”
————
Will the process of reporting a buyer be reviewed by an actual person or a bot? Will we receive canned answers?

Customer support representatives will be reviewing all reports. There will be canned answers associated with general issues raised for the hundreds and hundreds of cases reported. Reports will be handled on a case by case basis and will be deemed arbitrary if there is no mention of dissatisfaction with the seller or an unwillingness to complete the transaction with the seller.

Does this new PowerSeller policy constitute a barrier to entry? And what about seasonal sellers who cannot enjoy PS benefits because they sell for a few months each year (but most definitely qualify PS, they just are not onsite long enough each year to qualify)? And what about new sellers? Do they become targets with no protection? Do you guys not want new sellers?
————
Do you see a place for the small time seller on eBay in the future? I would love to stay but I am being pushed away with every calculated change and it seems many others are also. Is this what eBay is counting on?

These changes don’t have anything to do with the size of the seller. They are focused on the buying experience. With regard to DSRs and feedback, smaller sellers are actually the folks in a position to take an advantage of the new changes because they already provide a more personalized, attentive service to the individual buyer… helping ensure positive feedback after a transaction is completed.

We want all sellers to feel welcome on eBay and the new PowerSeller policy should not be seen as a barrier to entry, rather it should be seen as another incentive to sell more on eBay.

Will anything be done to ensure the 12-month period does not backfire on anyone?

There will inevitably be a small group of folks that are negatively effected by the 12-month window but again, we think that recent performance and activity is a much better indicator of what a buyer can expect to experience than a performance rating from 7-8 years ago.

A couple of months ago I received an email saying that a positive feedback had been removed because a buyer had been NARU’d after a relatively short time on Ebay.

On the Australian site my feedback now reads 99.9% for the last 12 months in spite of the fact that I have not received a neutral or neg for about 8 years, and I have been on a full 100% for about 6 or 7 years. I have never entered into mutually withdrawn feedback.

Please ask Mr Burke whether feedback that has been completely removed by Ebay is being counted as “non positive” feedback. If not, can you please ask him to review my feedback and clarify why it is calculated at 99.9% for the last 12 months on the Australian site. I am not asking for any adjustment to my feedback, only a clarification (you know, accountability) - I can supply a friends user ID with no neutrals or neg’s in the last 12 months and 4.9 dsr’s that currently rates at 99.5% if he would like to review that as well.

This is likely a data anomaly - with over 7 billion Feedback we occasionally have these come up. But since the seller is in US, I would ask that they wait until we update the US site next week. If it is still inaccurate, I can have a database engineer look into it - but I bet it’s accurate next week.

EBay is accepting the unverified opinion of buyers a fact, seller’s loose status based on the unverified feedback and DSR”s that buyers leave. Will eBay accept the reports of extortion and buyer bad behavior from sellers as fact without verifying those reports? Or will they only count against the buyer after being reviewed? A public system of accountability for sellers with no review of the facts and private backdoor accountability systems for buyers with a review of facts is not an equal and just system. So ask Brian if seller reports about buyers will be reviewed. Will sellers need to provide proof of extortion?

Sellers reports of buyers will be reviewed thoroughly. Extortion is very difficult to prove so the more proof a seller can provide, the better off we’ll all be. It will be easier to take action against buyers that have a pattern of behavior rather than a single instance of reported extortion - again because it is very difficult to prove a single instance of extortion.

In order to cut down on potential extortion situations we’re reducing the number of days someone can leave feedback from 90 to 60 days.
*How* does this cut down on potential extortion situations?

The window of time in which a buyer could resort to extortion has been shortened. For example, in the past a buyer could wait until 85 days after a transaction to practice extortion. The longer the time period; the longer the opportunity. We’ve reduced that window of opportunity considerably.

If the buyer did not pay, shouldn’t the “burden of proof” be on the buyer to report the reason why he / she did not pay?

Better yet, why not allow “private” reporting by the buyer to let eBay know that there was a good reason that they didn’t pay the seller?

What percentage of buyers actually have a valid reason for nonpayment? How about some eBay “statistics” to give us a better understanding of eBay’s desire to protect this group of eBay buyers who NEED the ability to leave negative feedback for a seller that never received payment.

We need any information regarding potential fraud to be public, and to be public fast. With regard to statistical information, Brian indicated that he would get UPI stats for me to share on the blog.

Tagged: , , , , , , , , , ,

StumbleUpon

732 Responses on this post. Click to add yours.

Pages: « 112 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 2249 »

AmberOn 05.23.2008 at 9:42 am Said:

Brews, that link I refer to is in the original announcement from Bill Cobb. It was updated in May, but the quote I gave you was there in January. It’s under the Bolded area “seller’s may only leave positive feedback” and is titled “For more details, please see our information page.” That link takes you to a page called Upcoming Changes to Feedback. If you expand the 12 month feedback area, you’ll see the calculations.

http://www2.ebay.com/aw/core/200801.shtml#2008-01-29054823

Granted, it was not in the BODY of the announcement, but a link WAS provided.

And, as you know, I’m no cheerleader, but fair is fair. The information was available for those who followed the links in the announcements and chose to read everything on the new policy.

If I hadn’t, I’d have missed the minimum pricing for BIN/Store inventory requirements. A requirement, hidden in the fees links, that has caused policy violations and massive takedowns of listings this week.

Ebay did a horrible job of making it easy to find and understand the massive amount of changes that were coming out. Many of us went into information overload and much of the “fine print” was buried in links rather than sent as an all-inclusive update to members.

I’m not arguing that at all.

But as I said, it WAS there in JANUARY if you read everything. I’m not surprised so many missed it (especially those who do not visit the boards/groups area).

AmberOn 05.23.2008 at 9:44 am Said:

Drat! Here’s the direct to the feedback page referenced in my previous post

http://pages.ebay.com/services/forum/new.html

Patricia1On 05.23.2008 at 10:34 am Said:

Elda - this is the right place. They sorely need to hear the sellers’ side of this.

TheBrewsNewsOn 05.23.2008 at 10:51 am Said:

@Amber

Please tell me what groups you belong to so that I can join! If you realized in January that the scoring was going to change and that it was going to be retroactive then YOU are the person I want to follow around.

As you said, the link was given in January and then updated in May (so it was not really “there” in January but rather in May). Because of eBay “information overload”, postal changes, VERO battles, nonpaying bidders, chargebacks, etc. I do not always go back and click on the links that are 4 months old to see if eBay changed anything from the past announcements.

I realize now that eBay’s instability means that I must review every announcement from the past 10 years which has links so that I am fully informed. Duly noted.

Fair is fair… yep, guess it is also fair for the buyer to receive a picture of a TV, too, rather than the TV that they thought they were getting. It is really all about the “expectations” versus the fine print buried in the paragraphs or several pages back.

I also somehow missed the policy announcment regarding digitally delivered items. The policy was announced hours AFTER my auctions were removed and I was issued a policy violation notice and A WEEK BEFORE the policy actually went into effect prohibiting digital downloads. I was assured verbally that the policy violation would be removed since I truly did nothing wrong. However, my Dashboard shows the violation still exists (I know just where I stand!) Somehow I am sure fair is fair in there, too.

I am still a little fuzzy how anyone, cheerleader or not, was able to figure out in January the information about neutrals scoring as negatives and that the scoring would be retroactive as you say you did. If the link was updated in May then anyone who did not have inside information would be a genius, in my book, to have figured it out in May. I really do seriously want to join your groups and learn from you. Please tell me more about the various groups you belong to!

MechelleOn 05.23.2008 at 10:54 am Said:

@Amber

I don’t know where in either of the links posted it demonstrates or states that neutrals will be counted as negatives for the public feedback view. Just as Brew pointed out we knew that this calculation was applied to feedback for the purpose of non performing seller or whatever, so it is quite reasonable for anyone to assume that was what they were referring to. So, no it is not fair it is the type of communication that would cause us to lose a dispute. Also, to hide important information (though it is not clear in any link either) in a link requiring a user to click to find the information will cause us to lose a dispute.

For this change to have been fair it should have been shown on one page and clearly stated such as:

though currently our feedback system does not apply any value in either direction relative to feedback percentage ratings on the publicly displayed view we have decided to include a negative rating to the neutral, which will lower the feedback score available for viewing on your feedback page.

Why does eBay have this policy……

examples……

consequences…….

Please note that as of May 19 your neutral ratings will retroactively carry a negative value decreasing your current feedback score for any neutrals you may have received over the past 12 months.

That would have been fair

urbankatOn 05.23.2008 at 11:05 am Said:

They sorely need to hear the sellers’ side of this

I believe I am the only buyer here and sellers are on every board, maybe consider that ebay does not only want the smaller sellers gone but also smaller buyers, they may want people to spend a ceratin dollar amount per anum or even quarterly.

The AC FB board says NOone is the manning that board, I really doubt there are alot of staff doing so, usally in corprate America when things like this happen they find other things for most of the staff too do like track what is selling and how much, they knew far in advance what sellers would be saying.

I think all these boards are for just what they are mainly used for, complaining and getting frustrations out, soon just like in the past sellers will come back because the other places are slower and Ebay is still the best known and best bet.

They know it, it has been the same since the original founder sold Ebay, and it will always be this way, corporate motto, “if you don’t like then leave” which is the same thing the sellers say to the buyers when a question is not liked or a buyer is upset with the rudeness of the comments, sellers always put personal comments with (if they answer at all) answers, the part that is ironic is sellers are Ebay’s buyers right you buy their service and you are complaining about the way you are treated, just as buyers complain about sellers treatment of them.

implogOn 05.23.2008 at 11:06 am Said:

Maybe even eBay employee sellers know what’s going down.

Ebay policy says employees are required to identify that fact in any auction they list. If you search on “ebay employee” (with quotation marks) in “Title and Description” you will find eBay employee auctions.

Take a look at auction 320253093437 Note the tiny font text at the bottom of the “Description” box.

I wonder why the eBay employee seller is trying to hide their association with eBay. One would think the seller would be proud of their employer. It seems an “excellent buying experience” might even be enhanced by buying from an eBay employee.

Why the tiny font?

CharityOn 05.23.2008 at 11:37 am Said:

I keep reading that you think that buyers who haven’t paid shouldn’t be allowed to leave negative feedback. However, I think if that were the case there would be a lot of disenfranchised buyers. For instance, recently I took part in a transaction in which the seller demanded I pay him more money than what the auction required. I, of course, refused. He then opened an NPI. I was awarded with 2 strikes against my previously unsullied account. Eventually through appeals the two strikes were removed, but Ebay made sure they sent me letters telling me that they were were doing me a favor and that next time I should just pay the seller. If I were not allowed to leave negative feedback for this unscrupulous seller, I can say I would probably not be buying on Ebay anymore.

All of you like to think that the sellers are golden and only buyers are dishonest or fraudulent, but that just isn’t the case.

Patricia1On 05.23.2008 at 1:00 pm Said:

charity - how can you say that in light of current policy changes? The sellers have been cut off at the knees which is why many are leaving. In your case you should have been able to furnish ebay with proof that the seller wanted more money - surely the seller sent you an email or ebay message that could have been handed over to ebay as proof. If you did and still got the strike then blame ebay - because they want to rake in the dough but have NO customer service to speak of. Don’t make all sellers pay for that one.

Wendy RousellOn 05.23.2008 at 1:16 pm Said:

I used to sell a lot on eBay because I had a physical store. and had 99.8% positive. I no longer have the store so I don’t do much selling anymore only a bit of buying.
I had a retaliatory neutral left by a poor seller that shipped 3 weeks after payment was made and wouldn’t return my emails regarding this purchase. Product was great, seller was not. I left a neutral and even though I paid her within an hour of the end of auction I was also left a neutral.
Now my excellent feedback of 99.8% has dropped to 87.5% How is that fair to me?? I had an excellet reputation as a buyer and a seller and now my reputation is shot. Would you buy from or sell to someone with only 87% positive. Makes me look like a crook!
I am thoroughly disgusted with this new policy and am seriously considering giving up entirely on eBay.

urbankatOn 05.23.2008 at 2:13 pm Said:

Hello All,
Welcome Charity and Wendy!

I am pleased to see more buyers here before the really rude sellers arrive, there are a couple here but so far most have been really good, not like the boards where they shoot first and then Don’t have any thing worthy to say.

Please continue to send your messages as Somewhere will be reading this if that is not the case yet, a setence was clipped alittle so actually this place is manned unlike the other places.

Have you been to the other boards?

CheriOn 05.23.2008 at 2:16 pm Said:

eBay, by trying to fix what is not broken, you have simply created another loophole for bad buyes and sellers to manipulate. By counting only 12 months, instead of the entire history of a user’s feedback, all one has to do is sit and wait out one year, buy one item on eBay, receive a feedback, and voila 100% positive feedback! How does that measure fairness and accountability? The old feedback system works much much better and a lot more fair to sellers. The buyers have enough protection as it is with sellers unable to leave a negative feedback and yet you are making it more difficult for sellers to improve their business viability. Isn’t the DSR enough transparency? Better yet, why not remove neutral as an option since you count it as a negative anyway???? It simply does not follow!

CheriOn 05.23.2008 at 2:51 pm Said:

Mechelle, I like your idea of swapping BBL list. Sellers need to protect themselves since eBay is a little slow in addressing our concerns. That really is a brilliant idea! What category do you list in?

CheriOn 05.23.2008 at 3:09 pm Said:

I wonder how this new changes will affect ebay’s stock market value :-)???? I for one am not investing in it. Has anyone checked Liquidation.com as another source to sell to?

MarkOn 05.23.2008 at 3:11 pm Said:

Every change I have heard about I agree with and feel are wonderful steps in the right direction EXCEPT the removal of my only protection against deadbeat bidders and especially after the rate hikes, I’m tired of being treated like I’m dishonest when Im a seller and I’m paying ebay to be there.

For that reason, my money is where my mouth is.. my subscriptions and my store are now cancelled and there will be no new listings until I can have the same feedback ability that my (supposed) trading partner will have.

I might only be one person, but I voted with my seller account as I encourage every seller to do.

M-

Pages: « 112 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 2249 »

We close the comments for posts after 30 days. If you would still like to comment on this post, please use our contact form.